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Two-spined Rainbow Skink Carlia amax Scincidae Hunting By Tail Whipping, Hoping To Entice A Paper Wasp To Investigate In The Waltheria indica Shrub Stems Shoal Bay 01
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Two-spined Rainbow Skink Carlia amax Scincidae Hunting By Tail Whipping, Hoping To Entice A Paper Wasp To Investigate In The Waltheria indica Shrub Stems Shoal Bay
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Valanga sp. Acrididae 2nd Instar Nymph Many Birds Hunt Grasshoppers On The On Barleria strigosa Urban Darwin
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Valanga sp. Acrididae 2nd Instar Nymph Seems To Be Pollinating Plants As Its Legs Have Sticky Pollen Grains Attached To Them On Me Urban Darwin
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Valanga sp. Acrididae 2nd Instar Nymph Seems To Be Pollinating Plants As Its Legs Have Sticky Pollen Grains Attached To Them Urban Darwin 01
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Valanga sp. Acrididae 2nd Instar Nymph Seems To Be Pollinating Plants By Foraging On Flowers & Inadvertently Getting Pollen Grains Attached To Its Clypeus & Maxilary Palpus Urban Darwin
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Valanga sp. Acrididae 2nd Instar Nymph Warming Up On Barleria strigosa Acanthaceae On A Cool Tropical Morning Urban Darwin
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Valanga sp. Acrididae Hatch From Eggs Into Nymphs Undergoing Five Moults, Becoming More Like Adult Insect With Each Developmental Stage Urban Darwin
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Waltheria indica Glomerules Stamen Opposite The Petals, Filaments United Along The Membrane-Margine Almost To The Apex, Erect Anthers Horizontal & Plumose Stigmas 12-Branched Shoal Bay
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Waltheria indica Malvaceae Flowers Are Assembled In Contracted Cymes With The Appearance Of A Glomerule Or Cluster Of Flowers Shoal Bay 01
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Waltheria indica Malvaceae Flowers Are Assembled In Contracted Cymes With The Appearance Of A Glomerule Or Cluster Of Flowers Shoal Bay
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Wasp Moth Amata huebneri Erebidae Abdomen Black With Six, Thin, Orange Stripes In Males, Cylindrical With Rounded, Posterior End With Tuft Of Black Hairs Shoal Bay
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Wasp Moth Amata huebneri Erebidae Secondary Setae That Give The Common Name Of Woolly Bears Shoal Bay 01
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Wasp Moth Amata huebneri Erebidae Secondary Setae That Give The Common Name Of Woolly Bears Shoal Bay
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Wasp-mimicking Hoverfly Possibly Dideopsis aegiota Syrphidae Foraging On Waltheria indica Malvaceae Shoal Bay 01
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Wasp-mimicking Hoverfly Possibly Dideopsis aegiota Syrphidae Foraging On Waltheria indica Malvaceae Shoal Bay
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White-breasted Woodswallow Artamus leucorynchus After A Brief Aerial Scuffle It Had Captured A Field Cricket Which Could Fly At Least Short Distances Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Artamus leucorynchus Artamidae Grasping & Dismembering The Teleogryllus oceanicus Prey Helping To Swallow It Quickly Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Artamus leucorynchus Artamidae With Its Prey The Cricket Teleogryllus oceanicus Gryllidae Which Goes Down The Hatch Whole & Head First Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow As It Tried To Pounce On A Fast Moving Prey Which Quickly Hid In The Dactyloctenium sp. Culms It Quickly Lost Focus & Returned To Wait For Another Chance Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Chasing A Fleeing Highly Mobile Insect Becomes Problematic In The Prostrate Ipomoea pes-caprae With Its Tangle Of Vines Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Gave Continuous Warning Chirps Until It Flew Off With Several Flock Members Following & Encouraging It To Drop Its Catch Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Lucky Not To Be Chased By Its Hungry Flock Colleagues After The In-Flight Swoop & Scoop Of The Field Cricket & Forced To Eat Mid-Air Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Mainly Dry Season Aerial Flock Hunters Snagging Migrating Dragonflies Midair ButThese Were Perched & Unusually Focused On The Ground Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Not Patient Enough Or An Effective Gleaning Strategy In Either Dactyloctenium sp. Or Ipomoea sp. Foliage Searching For Hiding Insects Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Scooped Up The Field Cricket On The Fly After It Launched Itself Into A Frightened Burst Of Fluttering Flight When Swooped Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Seemed Surprised The Elusive Prey Was Not Where It Was When Detected From Its Sit-And-Wait Elevated Roost Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow Small Flocks Would Swoop The Ground Hunting The Migrating Field Crickets & Then Retreat To The Naked Gyrocarpus americanus Tree If Unsuccessfull Buffalo Creek
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White-breasted Woodswallow The Swoop & Scoop Strategy Was More Effective Than The Drop & Pounce Strategy As Teleogryllus oceanicus Were Slow Flyers But Fast Scramblers Buffalo Creek